The park bench was
deserted as I sat down to read beneath
the long, straggly branches of an old
willow tree. Disillusioned by life with
good reason to frown, for the world was
intent on dragging me down.
And if that
weren't enough to ruin my day, A young
boy out of breath approached me, all
tired from play.
He stood right
before me with his head tilted down and
said with great excitement, "Look what I
found!"
In his hand was a
flower, and what a pitiful sight, with
it's petals all worn, not enough rain,
or to little light. Wanting him to take
his dead flower and go off to play, I
faked a small smile and then shifted
away. But instead of retreating he sat
next to my side and placed the flower to
his nose and declared with overacted
surprise, "It sure smells pretty and
it's beautiful, too. That's why I picked
it; here it's for you."
The weed before me
was dying or dead. Not vibrant of
colours, orange, yellow or red. But I
knew I must take it, or he might never
leave. So I reached for the flower, and
replied, "Just what I need." But instead
of him placing the flower in my hand, he
held it mid-air without reason or plan.
It was then that I noticed for the very
first time that weed-toting boy could
not see: he was blind.
I heard my voice
quiver, tears shone like the sun as I
thanked him for picking the very best
one. You're welcome, he smiled, and then
ran off to play, unaware of the impact
he'd had on my day. I sat there and
wondered how he managed to see a
self-pitying woman beneath an old willow
tree. How did he know of my
self-indulged plight?
Perhaps from his
heart, he'd been blessed with true
sight. Through the eyes of a blind
child, at last I could see the problem
was not with the world; the problem was
me. And for all of those times I myself
had been blind, I vowed to see the
beauty in life, and appreciate every
second that's mine. And then I held that
wilted flower up to my nose and breathed
in the fragrance of a beautiful rose.
And smiled as I watched that young boy,
another weed in his hand about to change
the life of an unsuspecting old man.
~ Anon ~